The best way to fight the fire
was to pull down buildings. This made firebreaks (gaps) over which the
fire could not spread.

The Lord Mayor, Thomas
Bloodworth, was in charge of fire-fighting. He did not want to pull
down buildings because the law said he would then have to pay for
rebuilding them.

But, late on Sunday, he was
forced to ask King Charles II for help. The King sent the Earl
of Craven to organise things. He was a fire expert:

The Earl's hobby was
fighting fires.

He would pay big rewards to
the first person to tell him about an outbreak of fire in London.

He would jump on his white
horse, which he kept ready, and ride out to do what he could to
help.

Some people said, "His
horse smelt a fire as soon as it happened."

With a group of sailors, he
began to pull down buildings. Later, Samuel
Pepys, suggested they use
gunpowder to blow them up. He wrote about it in his famous diary.

Eventually, the wind died away
on Wednesday 5th September. The
firebreaks started to work properly and the fire stopped.

It had destroyed over 13,000
houses and 87 churches including St. Paul's
Cathedral. About 100,000
people were made homeless, but only 6 people were killed.

People had fled the City on foot
and by boat on the River Thames to the fields around London. Some
people made it as far as Windsor. Pepys
wrote that the wind also brought many burnt papers to Windsor.

Sir William Backhouse from
Swallowfield Park went up to London with his friend, John Evelyn the
Diarist, to take a look at the ruins.

At the manor court at Ladye
Place in Hurley, a small boy from London said his father had started
the fire. He had thrown fire-bombs into the baker's shop. He was
probably lying, but why?